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at addressing a new class of outstanding PhD researchers from all over the world. Successful candidates will receive multiple doctoral degrees. Course organisation The EDLE programme is carried out with
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, this project aims to apply the innovative machine learning MACE framework. MACE allows for more efficient simulations by using machine learning to capture the underlying physics of gas transport, offering a
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understanding of alkali metals’ unique physical properties. At high pressures and temperatures, these metals reveal complex phase transitions that remain poorly understood with exotic structures emerging
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physics will be employed to improve the robustness and applicability of fracture modelling. Artificial intelligence will support this effort, accelerating parameter calibration and facilitating uncertainty
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measurements to the results of existing techniques using backscatter to quantify forest attributes through synthetic aperture radar imaging. The overall project, spanning multiple institutions, aims to produce a
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University Hospital, Duke Regional Hospital, Duke Raleigh Hospital, Duke Health Integrated Practice, Duke Primary Care, Duke Home Care and Hospice, Duke Health and Wellness, and multiple affiliations
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of the largest iPSC biobanks in the United States which will give us access to multiple cell lineages carrying mutation in multiple key genes of the cardiovascular system. Education Requirement: Ph.D. in
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MRI animal scanner, and a Siemens INVEON PET/SPECT/CT animal scanner. The MRRC currently supports 32 projects funded by $31.5 million of NIH grants. Projects span multiple disciplines including
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(Nobel Prize for Physics in 1901) and Wangari Maathai (Nobel Peace Prize in 2004). Since 2006, research at JLU has received continuous funding from the Excellence Initiative schemes and the Excellence
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personae who carried out research and taught at JLU include a number of Nobel Prize winners, such as Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (Nobel Prize for Physics in 1901) and Wangari Maathai (Nobel Peace Prize in 2004